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Major League Soccer
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Since the North American
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Soccer League disintegrated in 1984, America has been plagued by its soccer
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bores. These folks, who are the same people who can't understand why Paul
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Tsongas wasn't elected president, are perpetually lathered at American
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indifference to the king of sports. But it's the most popular sport in the
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world! But 18 million Americans play it! But kids love it! But there ought
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to be a pro league! But ... but ... but ... (Full disclosure: I, too, am
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a soccer bore.)
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Finally,
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the bores have shut up. Professional soccer, a sport whose American history is
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an unbroken record of , has, at long last, found a happy home here. Major
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League Soccer opened its third season last week with 12 teams. MLS is drawing
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nearly 20,000 fans per game--NASL averaged only 15,000 in its best season. Last
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October's championship game sold out Washington, D.C.'s 57,000-seat RFK
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stadium.
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MLS has TV contracts: ABC will broadcast a dozen games this
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season, and ESPN will air 25 more. It has endorsement deals: Corporations
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including Pepsi, AT&T, and Nike will spend $80 million on MLS over the next
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five years. It has expansion teams: MLS just added franchises in Miami and
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Chicago. MLS, in short, looks very much like a real American sport.
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MLS is a
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weird experiment, a test of America's sports character. Soccer has always been
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perceived as vaguely un-American: It's too low-scoring, there's too much
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cooperation, the players are too small and too Euro, it looks bad on
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television. MLS, in fact, is un-American, but not for those (wrong)
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reasons. MLS is un-American because it marks the first time that an American
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pro sports league hasn't tried to be the best in the world. MLS is perhaps the
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10 th best soccer league in the world, a shout and a mile from the
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premier divisions in Germany, Spain, Italy, and England. (According to soccer
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experts, the best MLS teams could compete with teams from Austria or Paraguay.
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Paraguay? )
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America's fans are a spoiled lot. It is the
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philosophy of American sports that if you can't be the best, buy the best.
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North Americans invented basketball, baseball, and football and dominate them
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by divine right. The United States has used dollar power to make itself the
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world capital of other, non-American sports. The NHL buys the best hockey
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players from eastern Europe. The PGA tour buys the best golfers from Europe and
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Asia. Huge purses bring the best European and Asian figure skaters here.
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Foreign boxers travel to Vegas for title fights. In every sport in which the
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United States stages pro competitions, those competitions are the world's
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finest (except, perhaps, for track and field).
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And that
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was NASL's strategy in its glory days. During the mid- and late-'70s, NASL
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lured some of the very best players in the world to America--Pele, Franz
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Beckenbauer, George Best, Johan Cruyff--and flirted with being one of the
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world's top leagues.
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But that's not the way MLS was designed. In an age of
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nearly universal free agency and vicious competition among teams, MLS is a
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command economy, the North Korea of pro sports. After the United States hosted
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the 1994 World Cup, U.S. soccer impresario Alan Rothenberg recruited a bunch of
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tycoons to invest in a new pro league. MLS, Rothenberg believed, should avoid
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the mistakes that killed NASL: too much expansion, too much spending, too many
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foreigners.
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Rothenberg devised a crafty
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mechanism to lower MLS's costs. He constituted the league as a "single entity."
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Each team has an "owner-operator," but the league itself owns the players. It
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negotiates all contracts and assigns stars to teams. (In other pro leagues,
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players sign contracts with teams.) MLS players can't auction themselves to the
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highest bidder.
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Though
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soccer salaries are soaring worldwide, MLS has gone cut-rate. NASL paid stars
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more than $1 million a year in the '70s. MLS's maximum salary is only
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$236,750--less than the NBA's minimum salary. MLS's minimum is only
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$24,000. The payroll for an entire MLS team is capped at $1.6 million--less
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than half of what a top European player earns. MLS allows only five foreigners
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on its 20-man rosters, a move that cuts costs while guaranteeing playing time
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for home-grown players. MLS also recruits most of its foreign players in Latin
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America, largely because Latin players are cheaper than Europeans. Latin
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players also appeal to MLS's best fans. Latinos are a quarter of MLS's
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spectators, and certainly the most fervent of them. MLS relies heavily on ,
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assigning foreign players to cities where they'll be most popular.
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MLS's calculated efforts have created a lovely
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league, one that preserves the intimacy that the NBA, et al., have lost. MLS is
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major-league sport with minor-league charm. The average MLS ticket costs a mere
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$13, one-third the price of an NHL or NBA ticket. The relatively small crowds
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mean that fans sit close to the action. MLS encourages fan clubs. At every D.C.
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United game, a section called the "Barra Brava" is jammed with Salvadorans and
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Bolivians wielding noisemakers. MLS may not feature world-class soccer, but its
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"toque toque " style of play, which requires lots of short, accurate
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passes, is more elegant and entertaining than the kick-and-run game many
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Americans are accustomed to. The best teams--D.C. United, Kansas City
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Wizards--pass beautifully and score lots of goals. And players like Marco
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Etcheverry, Carlos Valderrama, Jaime Moreno, Preki, and Eric Wynalda would be
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thrilling in any league.
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But this
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may not be enough. MLS is losing tons of money--more than $30 million in its
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first two seasons. This summer's World Cup will distract fans and remove the
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league's best players for two months in the middle of the season. And MLS
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players have filed a lawsuit to end the single-entity league. When MLS
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launched, U.S. players were so grateful to get work that they accepted MLS's
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terms of employment. Now they argue that the single entity suppresses salaries
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and violates antitrust laws. The lawsuit goes to trial this fall.
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MLS's major obstacles, however, are its ambivalence about
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itself and America's ambivalence about soccer. For MLS to grow, it needs to
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fill stadiums with Joe Sports Fans, the kind of folks who aren't soccer bores
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but will attend a few games a season. And for MLS to make itself a top-class
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league, it needs to spend tens of millions of dollars to steal European players
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and protect its own stars. (Europe is already grabbing MLS's best: Goalkeeper
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Brad Friedel went to Liverpool last season, and more top MLS players may follow
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him.)
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MLS's dilemma is this: If it
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doesn't pay for talent, it will certainly remain a minor league. But even if it
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does pay for talent, no one knows whether thousands of new fans will come. MLS
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doesn't know whether it wants to be a very expensive world-class soccer league
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or a very charming second-class one. And America doesn't know if it cares.
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If you missed the link to
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MLS's ethnic marketing strategy, click .
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